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1000 tulosta hakusanalla "The Tree"

The Tree That Bends

The Tree That Bends

Patricia Riles Wickman

The University of Alabama Press
1999
sidottu
The author of this book offers a paradigm for the interpretation of south-eastern Native American, and Spanish colonial history, and another way of viewing the development of the United States. She describes the genesis of those North American groups collectively known as Maskoki.
The Tree Rings' Tale

The Tree Rings' Tale

John Fleck

University of New Mexico Press
2009
sidottu
The science of tree rings - dendroclimatology - had not been developed when John Wesley Powell made his epic voyages down the Colorado River in 1869, 1871, and 1872. Nevertheless he observed that the rising and falling of the river differed over the years and came to understand the important role these variations played in the lives of people trying to live in the West. While Powell was braving the Colorado River's rapids, a tree in southwestern Colorado was putting on rings. In 1869 it was a modest ring. In 1871, the year Powell returned to begin his second trip, the ring was remarkably thin. In 1872, as the river rose to levels that made it almost impassable, the tree's ring was fat. We know this because, over a century later, paleoclimatologist Connie Woodhouse has studied that tree and many others in the Four Corners region, using the fat and thin rings to estimate how much water has flowed down the Colorado River each year for the past millennium. ""The Tree Rings' Tale"" addresses one of the most important guiding principles for life in the arid West and one that scientists have long recognized: climate variability. Combining classic climatology with oceanography, meteorology, geology, archaeology, and even a touch of astronomy, this exploration offers young scientists a chance to unravel how, over the past 150 years, we have come to learn more about the natural world. Activities included after each chapter provide hands-on experience with some of the very processes scientists use to understand how our world works.
The Tree of Hope

The Tree of Hope

Voices of Future Generations; Jakob Von Uexküll

Voices of Future Generations International Children's Book Series
2017
pokkari
This book introduces Khadra to us, a young girl living in a desert landscape and describes how she turned her home into an oasis. "The Tree of Hope", written by our Youth Ambassador Kehkashan Basu, is an inspiring story of a girl who makes a difference, rising beyond conflict and drought, by planting and caring for trees, to benefit her whole community.Through the Voices of Future Generations Children's Book Series, we share two key promises that the world has made to you and to future generations: The Convention on the Rights of the Child and The Future We Want Declaration. These upcoming years are crucial as world leaders will agree on a new sustainable development framework for the next 15 years. The proposed 17 goals include targets to end poverty, to ensure healthy lives and quality education and to combat climate change, among others. The decisions taken will undoubtedly have a huge impact on children's lives and rights today as well as the lives and rights of future generations.
The Tree Whisperer

The Tree Whisperer

Michelle Beauregard

Michelle Beauregard
2025
pokkari
The Tree Whisperer Book is a journey into the hidden language of trees, weaving together messages received through Reiki from trees around the world. From Sweden to towering sentinels in Canada, these trees whisper stories of resilience, healing, and deep interconnectedness-if we are willing to listen. Through poetic reflections, insights, and a deep connection to nature's energy, this book invites you to: - Experience trees as conscious beings with wisdom to share.- Explore the energetic connection between Reiki and the natural world.- Discover how trees can support healing, balance, and self-discovery. Perfect for Reiki practitioners, energy healers, nature lovers, forest therapy guides, eco-spiritual seekers, and creative souls, The Tree Whisperer Book is a portal into the unseen world of the trees-offering connection and a gentle reminder that we are never alone in this vast and living universe.
The Tree Hugger: A Dystopian Fairy Tale

The Tree Hugger: A Dystopian Fairy Tale

Heidi Garrett

Half-Faerie Publishing
2014
nidottu
Once Upon a Time Today is a collection of modern fairy tale retellings for those who have already left home. Born and raised in the Free Territories, Magnolia Lee Winthrop, prefers the company of trees and nature to spending time with most people. Although she's not much of a talker, she's got plenty of strong opinions about life and how it should be lived, just like her mother and grandmother. After the settlement's forest farm is burned to the ground, Magnolia's life can never be the same. To cope with her grief, she'll have to leave behind everything she's ever known and loved for a hard journey through a foreign, paved, and abandoned world. The Tree Hugger is a dystopian retelling of Han's Christian Andersen's "The Dryad." The Girl Who Believed in Fairy Tales is a prelude to the Once Upon a Time Today collection and includes the three short stories: "The Girl Who Watched for Elves" "The Girl Who Dreamed of Red Shoes" "The Girl Who Couldn't Sing" Novellas in the Once Upon a Time Today collection: Beautiful Beautiful Dreaming of the Sea The Tree Hugger I am Lily Dane
The Tree House

The Tree House

Glenn Haybittle

Cheyne Walk
2018
nidottu
Max and Ada, ten-year-old neighbours, are engrossed in composing a book of spells in a tree house in Paris when the Nazis arrive to occupy the city. Max, the child of a rape and abandoned by his mother, is in foster care; Ada is Jewish. Almost fifty years later Max, the black sheep of the family, summons his grandson to tell him the story of those years in Paris and reveal a guilty secret that has eaten away at him. His mind is now set on digging up the past and he wants Mark to accompany him across the English Channel. His dying wish is to shed light on the two missing women in his life: Ada and his mother. Mark though is struggling with his own existential crisis. There is a missing woman in his life too. A deftly accomplished tightrope act of pathos and humour, The Tree House is a bewitching novel of loss and restitution, heritage and the hereafter.